<p id="f-0-1-introduction-md"></p>
<h1>About Go Details &amp; Tips 101</h1>

<p>This book collects many details and provides several tips in Go programming.
The details and tips are categorized into</p>

<ul>
<li>syntax and semantics related</li>
<li>conversions related</li>
<li>comparisons related</li>
<li>compiler and runtime related</li>
<li>standard and user packages related</li>
</ul>

<p>Most of the details are Go specific, but several of them are language independent.</p>

<h2>About the author</h2>

<p>Tapir is the author of this book.
He also wrote the <a href="https://go101.org/article/101.html">Go 101</a> book.
He is planning to write some other <strong>Go 101</strong> series books.
Please look forward to.</p>

<p>Tapir was ever (maybe will be again) an indie game developer.
You can find his games here: <a href="https://tapirgames.com">tapirgames.com</a>.</p>

<h2>About GoTV</h2>

<p>During writing this book, the tool <a href="https://go101.org/apps-and-libs/gotv.html">GoTV</a>
is used to manage installations of multiple Go toolchain versions and check
the behavior differences between Go toolchain versions.</p>

<h2>Feedback</h2>

<p>Welcome to improve this book by submitting corrections to Go 101 issue list (<a href="https://github.com/go101/go101">https://github.com/go101/go101</a>) for all kinds of mistakes, such as typos, grammar errors, wording inaccuracies, wrong explanations, description flaws, code bugs, etc.</p>

<p>It is also welcome to send your feedback to the Go 101 twitter account: @zigo_101 (<a href="https://twitter.com/zigo_101">https://twitter.com/zigo_101</a>).</p>
